Do you believe Lance Armstrong is truly sorry? Or does he
just want to be able to compete again and maybe earn more money?
What you believe will partly be influenced by what he said,
where he said it and how he said it. And your opinion of why he said it will
also be influenced by them, as well as the opinion of other commentators.
Before I look at his case in detail, it’s worth looking at
what I think it’s fair to say is a good example of apologies which don’t really
work from the PR perspective – those ones issued by football clubs when headstrong
players have tweeted something controversial.
Put simply, does anyone believe the player genuinely
regrets his action at all? Or only just the consequences, if at all?
For obvious commercial reasons clubs and sponsors need and
have to at least go through the motions of having a statement issued by them
and the player and they need to take the position that they believe them. But does
anyone else other than their most dedicated fans? [This said, I’m sure at least
some of these are genuine on both parts.]
The problem with too many of these is that organisations usually
feel they have to be limited in form and content by the potential legal and
financial risks of admitting liability. But the collateral reputational damage
created by such ‘plastic’ apologies is a PR fail, which in its own way can
inflict financial damage through the effect on key stakeholders. How much will
depend on each organisation’s reputational elasticity of
demand.
What you need to be able to do is be as transparent as
possible about what has happened, in simple, non-legal or technical “weasel words”
language (otherwise it looks ‘plastic’ and just about limiting damage and
liability).
A TV interview or YouTube statement by the person
responsible is best — so people can see from all your non-verbal communication (89%
of what people perceive) that they/you mean it.
Briefly, best practice crisis PR starts well before any
event, with planning for probable internal and external crises by putting in
place an emergency communications process including preparation of agreed
holding statements and a media relations strategy.
Moving back to Lance Armstrong’s Oprah Winfrey interview,
there were, IMHO, both PR wins and fails in it.
Wins
- Doing it at all and not limiting or agreeing Oprah’s
questions, if we believe what has been said.
- Admitting, in simple words, the main accusations.
- His non-verbal communication —throughout most of it he looked,
IMHO, as if he meant what he said. Media commentators and other stakeholders
have made their comments, but many have their own agendas. You can only make
your own judgement by watching the interview yourself, but I’d say he’d have to
be a very good actor to fake what we saw.
- Admitting to having an untrue ‘perfect story’.
- Admitting “that guy” was still inside him i.e. he is still
fighting the urges which led to his failures.
- Taking full responsibility for his actions.
- Accepting, at least verbally, (almost all) of the
consequences.
- Being frank about his reasons for doing the interview —
wanting to compete again.
- Showing his upset at letting his son down. For someone so
controlled and controlling that will have been hard.
Fails
- Choosing to give an exclusive interview — it may be
negative as no matter what was said on-air it leads to reasonable suspicion
that some kind of pre-recording agreement, if only informal or psychological, was
made about how hard the questioning might be and that gives him more control and
hits the credibility of the interview and Oprah.
A media conference would have been a bear pit, but perhaps get better media
coverage if he could be as controlled
in reaction to the tough questions as he was here. Oprah had flack for ‘missing’
and leading questions — “In your opinion, was it possible to win…without
doping?” That’s a defence counsel question. That wouldn’t have happened in a
media conference. Sometimes you have to relinquish some control to give the
best impression through transparency.
- Saying he had used “Only
EPO” — Cheating is a digital issue – you either did or didn’t, there are no
degrees.
- Blaming his “character” — As Jean-Paul Sartre says in Being And Nothingness, it’s no excuse. Our
actions define our character, not vice versa. A coward is a person who does cowardly things. It’s a plea in mitigation, not an
excuse.
- Saying his most humbling moment was the reaction of his
foundation — why not his family’s? It made it look like achievements and kudos
mean more to him than them. But if that’s his honest feeling, then best to say
it.
- Choosing to start his ‘humbling moment’ answer with his ‘$75m
day’ — As the WW1 phrase put it, “Self-inflicted wound — expect no sympathy.”
Why did he mention it at all?
- Describing his punishment as a “death penalty” — we
understand what he meant, but over-dramatising it like this wins no fans or acceptance.
So who are his audiences with this, what are his messages and
will this get what he wants from them?
- The
General Public (for the benefit of him, sponsors & other business
contacts) – “It’s true and I’m sorry”. He wants acceptance of his apology so it’s
ok for him to be involved with sport again and maybe brands who might help him
recover some revenue. Only time will tell. Socialmention.com
shows that so far most people are still on the fence in terms of sentiment
about him.
- Sports
bodies (who already said he has to submit to their processes to
gain some relief on his punishment) – same messages. He clearly wants to compete
again. Who knows how far this will go to helping. Likely some way — it can’t be
ignored.
- Commercial
partners – same messages, plus ‘here I am doing the right thing’. This
will should lead to them being at least be open to working with him in time,
entirely dependent on the public reaction. But those who might want to work
with him will be pleased his reputational clan-up is under way.
Only time will tell if he’s done enough, in the right way
at the right time to get what he wants in PR and other terms.
To a
keen photographer it was temptation incarnate, an ocean of exciting products
printed on both sides of a very large sheet of paper in very small print.
Reissued
with updated listings regularly, the Jessops product list was a must-have for
anyone who loved their photography in the 1970s and ‘80s. And visits to their
stores was akin to stepping into Ali Baba’s cave — lined with objects of tech lust and often some
far-off wish for a pools win to make their purchase possible.
Ever
since Jessops opened in Edinburgh I have been a regular customer with them
and, given its place in my photographic life, I was deeply
saddened to read of its fall into administration yesterday.
So what
when wrong? Looking over the coverage, here are the main factors and lessons
for SMEs:
- Its core market had been eroded
from both ends of the price range – high megapixel smartphones being chosen
instead of lower-end digital cameras while top-spec cameras were being bought online
from specialists with better ranges based on reviews.
Lessons: 1) If a new trend or
technology is threatening your market, you need to be in it, not fight it like King
Canute or you’ll only be washed away by Schumpterian forces of “creative
destruction”. Jessops should have offered at least a range of the best
cameraphones, but didn’t; 2) You need to find a way to price-match or get close
to the price leaders on at least the key products, like John Lewis does. Linking with other independents (through groups like Euronics &
Nisa) to gain buying muscle to match the big boys’ prices is one way for smaller retailers.
- Its core marketplace was down
overall – you can’t
do much about the overall market but you could fight better for a share of what’s
still there (see below).
- It hadn’t made the “profits it planned” – it maybe needed to look
harder at costs, store locations and alternative ways to do its back-end
services (e.g. sharing distribution services with other High St chains). But
were its targets too high? Given the debt for equity swap with HSBC in 2009,
were they pushing for an unrealistic turnaround timetable? We don’t know, but
word on that may emerge.
- Timing of rent payments – this hits all High St
retailers equally unless they own their premises. Cashflow is always hard at this
time of year for retailers and combined with the importance of Christmas for so
many and fiercer price competition, it will have been one of the tipping point
factors that forced it into administration.
- It lost the confidence of its
suppliers – this
is a clear strategy fail. You have to retain credibility and the relationship. This
will have been one of the reasons why Canon didn’t go forward with a rumoured cash
injection (to help maintain their own High St sales). If Jessops marketing had
been better, this, and sales, might have been better.
- It was a victim of 'showrooming' — In economics a distinction is made between ‘experience
goods’ (things you have to try to know their quality) and ‘search goods’ (things
which are identical commodities for which you’ll typically simply seek the
lowest price as you know the product will be the same e.g. branded goods).
In the early days of e-tailing it was thought that experience goods couldn’t be
sold online, but once ‘showrooming’ (where customers sample a product in-store
and then buy it online) emerged, it meant experience goods were being tried on the
High St but bought online like search goods. So unless a shop can afford to
price-match, or at least get close in price, like John Lewis, they will often lose
the sale.
A survey showed 24% of all UK shoppers
‘showroomed’ in the lead-up to last Christmas (39% for 18-39s, 18%
for over-40s). You might worry that if that carries on the only winners will be
the big chains with ‘clicks & mortar’ offers including collect-in-store,
online-only retailers and the postal and courier services, but don’t panic yet as
showroomers only represent 10% of overall shoppers and only 40% of showroomers bought
items from a competitor after trying in-store.
The lesson could be, if appropriate in your market, to focus more marketing
spend on older non-showroomers via appropriate channels and, if possible, use in-store wi-fi to track what showroomers are searching for and
offer them a time-limited ‘have it now’ discount voucher on the in-store price if
they check-in to secure the sale. There are lots of occasions when you need
something TODAY, so ensure you maximise the stock of key items that are urgent
purchases.
Also, once the last date for online delivery for dates such as Christmas is
past, you can target your marketing messages on the ability to get it NOW
in-store in time for the big day.
So how else can local and independent High St retailers
fight back?
- Make
good use of PR and social media – they work just as well
for you as the big boys. Yes, they have dedicated teams of experts, but with the
key knowledge, the help of people like me, some creativity and some dedicated
time you can make it work for you too. It’s all about content and that’s a
level playing field where your David can beat the chain Goliath, especially if
you can offer the product today.
- Reassess
your basic business model, including location to ensure you’re doing
everything you can to make the most of your offer & USPs.
- Make
sure you’re communicating your USPs regularly —
I was amazed to find a local computer supplies shop in Forfar is cheaper for my
printer ink than anywhere in Dundee, but I haven’t seen them advertising it
anywhere. Shout about your strengths!
- Look
into linking up with other local independents to help each other – like the retailers in chain-averse Totnes. Their solidarity is said to be one
of the factors behind their success.
There are, sadly, no panaceas for all High St retailers, but if you undertsand your business well you can maximise your chance of not being the latest victim of its tranforming character.
Given my long and happy relationship with it, I hope PWC can find some way of saving Jessops.